Latest Headlines Groundbreaking Set for National Law Enforcement Museum
By NLEOMF
Apr 14, 2010 - 3:17:18 PM
With strong backing from America’s law enforcement, corporate and
philanthropic communities, the National Law Enforcement Officers Memorial Fund
(NLEOMF) announced today that it will break ground in October on the first-ever
National Law Enforcement Museum in
Washington, DC.
Groundbreaking will take place on October 14,
2010. The Museum will be built on Federal land across the street from the
existing National Law Enforcement Officers Memorial in historic Judiciary
Square, the symbolic seat of the nation’s criminal justice system. A gala
celebration is planned for that evening at the National Building Museum. The
National Law Enforcement Museum is scheduled to open in late 2013.
“Almost ten years after Congress authorized
this project, and following a lot of hard work, planning and generosity from
the law enforcement community, corporate America and caring citizens, we are
very excited and eager to get shovels in the ground later this year,” said Craig W. Floyd, chairman and chief executive officer
of the Memorial Fund. “Law enforcement officers have been serving and sacrificing
for our nation dating back to the earliest days of American history. Their
story needs and deserves to be told,” he declared.
The non-profit NLEOMF, which built and
maintains the National Law Enforcement Officers Memorial, is also leading the effort
to build the National Law Enforcement Museum. The NLEOMF’s governing body is composed of top
officials from 16 national law enforcement organizations.
The 55,000-square-foot, mostly underground
institution will be a world-class experiential museum with high-tech
interactive exhibitions. The Museum will include a vast collection of law
enforcement artifacts and dedicated spaces for research and education.
Visitor experiences will range from assuming
the role of a police dispatcher in the Motorola 911 Emergency Call Center; to
making split-second, life-or-death decisions posed by the use-of-force judgment
simulator; to solving crimes in the Museum’s Target Forensics Lab. Other major
exhibitions will focus on the history of law enforcement, corrections, tools of
the trade, and a fascinating look at a day in the life of an officer. The “Reel
to Real” exhibit will give visitors the opportunity to compare real-life law
enforcement with depictions in the movies and on television.
In the Museum’s Hall of Remembrance, visitors
will learn the inspirational stories of the nearly 19,000 fallen heroes whose
names are inscribed on the National Law Enforcement Officers Memorial. A
changing exhibits gallery sponsored by DuPont will focus on topical issues of
the day and delve deeper into some of the milestone moments of law
enforcement’s past.
One of the most comprehensive collections of
law enforcement artifacts in the United States will be used by the Museum for
its exhibitions, educational programs and research activities. The Museum’s
collection already comprises more than 10,000 objects, including a 1703
sheriff’s writ (the oldest artifact in the collection), items from the 1932
Lindbergh baby kidnapping case and trial, Al Capone’s bullet-resistant vest and
the costume worn in the 1990 movie, RoboCop
2. In addition, the Museum has been designated as the official
repository for oral history transcripts from members of the Society of Former
Special Agents of the FBI.
In the area of education, the National Law
Enforcement Museum will offer a wide range of programs for school-age children,
families, adults and law enforcement professionals. In fact, the Museum’s
educational efforts are already under way. A forensics-based science activity
for middle school students has been pilot tested, and staff are currently
developing a domestic violence awareness program that is supported by the
Verizon Foundation.
“The National Law Enforcement Museum will be a
must-see destination for people visiting the nation’s capital,” Mr. Floyd said.
“It will also be an important hub for the study of law enforcement in America
and for engaging current and future generations in what the law enforcement
profession means to our society and our democracy,” he added.
The Museum is being designed by Davis Buckley Architects and Planners, the DC firm
that also created the National Law Enforcement Officers Memorial, which was
dedicated in 1991. Exhibit design is being led by the Boston firm of Christopher Chadbourne & Associates,
whose work also includes the Donald W. Reynolds Museum and Education Center at
Mount Vernon and the National Museum of the Marine Corps, in Quantico, VA. Clark Construction of Bethesda, MD, has been
selected as the project’s general contractor.
Funds for the construction and development of
the Museum are being raised privately by the NLEOMF, which has launched an $80
million capital campaign called “A Matter of Honor.” To date, law enforcement
organizations, corporations, foundations and individuals from across the
country have donated nearly $40 million toward that goal. The District of
Columbia Government has also been a strong supporter of the project,
authorizing up to $80 million in industrial revenue bonds and providing a
20-year sales tax credit for the Museum worth up to $10 million.
Major donations of $1 million or more have
come from Motorola, DuPont, Target, Verizon, Mag-Lite, Advanced Interactive
Systems, Panasonic, the California Correctional Peace Officers Association and
the Police Unity Tour, whose $5 million donation is the single largest to date.
Former Presidents George H.W. Bush and Bill Clinton serve as co-chairs of the
Museum’s National Honorary Campaign Committee, which also includes seven former
Attorneys General of the United States, as well as other former government
officials and celebrities. The Museum was authorized by a public law enacted in
2000. The law was authored by U.S. Senator Ben Nighthorse Campbell, a former
deputy sheriff.